Listening to virtual space in recorded popular music
Listening to virtual space in recorded popular music
Research on virtual recorded space manifests a division between productionandreception-based approaches. I address a number of issues which complicatediscourse across perspectives and outline why a convergence may bebeneficial to research in various disciplines. I consolidate previous models oflistening, including Moore (2012) and Zagorski-Thomas (2014), and arguethat the ecological approach to perception and research on embodied cognitionmay provide a useful theoretical framework for bridging this divide. Thisis exemplified by music analysis and interpretation of Karnivool’s (2009)‘Goliath’. I discuss the virtual recorded space that the track affords me andconsider how listeners may narrativise the track’s personic environment accordingto ecological/embodied principles.
105-118
Royal College of Music (KMH) & Art of Record Production
Gamble, Steven
5c087d9b-e9b4-4a31-ae97-b25da3defb90
4 June 2019
Gamble, Steven
5c087d9b-e9b4-4a31-ae97-b25da3defb90
Gamble, Steven
(2019)
Listening to virtual space in recorded popular music.
In,
Proceedings of the 12th Art of Record Production Conference: Mono: Stereo: Multi.
12th Art of Record Production Conference (01/12/17 - 03/12/17)
Royal College of Music (KMH) & Art of Record Production, .
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Book Section
Abstract
Research on virtual recorded space manifests a division between productionandreception-based approaches. I address a number of issues which complicatediscourse across perspectives and outline why a convergence may bebeneficial to research in various disciplines. I consolidate previous models oflistening, including Moore (2012) and Zagorski-Thomas (2014), and arguethat the ecological approach to perception and research on embodied cognitionmay provide a useful theoretical framework for bridging this divide. Thisis exemplified by music analysis and interpretation of Karnivool’s (2009)‘Goliath’. I discuss the virtual recorded space that the track affords me andconsider how listeners may narrativise the track’s personic environment accordingto ecological/embodied principles.
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Published date: 4 June 2019
Venue - Dates:
12th Art of Record Production Conference, Royal College of Music, Stockholm, Sweden, Stockholm, Sweden, 2017-12-01 - 2017-12-03
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Local EPrints ID: 496115
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496115
PURE UUID: b0e91110-ae0e-4a64-aa3c-f13591ba5953
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Date deposited: 04 Dec 2024 17:45
Last modified: 04 Feb 2025 03:14
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Author:
Steven Gamble
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